Hillman Publications Airboy debuted in
Air Fighters Comics #2 (
cover-date Nov. 1942), an anthology series featuring a variety of aviator heroes; the first issue of the title had been published a year before, featuring a completely different cast of characters who were never seen again. In the early issues, Biro wrote the scripts with Dave Wood and drew the covers, Al Camy was the initial story artist. He was followed by
Tony DiPreta and, beginning with
Air Fighters #10 (July 1943),
Fred Kida, who would become closely associated with the series.
Ernie Schroeder became the regular artist with
Airboy Comics vol. 5, #11 (Dec. 1948), through the end of the series' run, with
Dan Barry, Maurice Del Bourgo,
Carmine Infantino, and others supplying an occasional story. One of Airboy's most frequently recurring supporting characters was the German aviator Valkyrie, who fought on the side of the Axis as one of the Airmaidens but then defected to the Allies. The
cleavage-baring
aviatrix was one of the most popular characters in the series, making numerous appearances.
Chuck Dixon, writer of the 1980s revival, would describe Valkyrie as "a cross between a
Milton Caniff siren and
Veronica Lake", and declare her the "sexiest character of Golden Age comics bar none". Following the Allies' victory in World War II in 1945, the series re-orientated and featured Airboy battling against the new terror,
Communists. and a general downturn in the market. Two issues were reprinted in 1973 by Don Maris' Nostalgia Inc.
Comic Reprints, and a trade paperback entitled
Valkyrie!: From the Pages of Air Fighters and the Airboy was published in 1982 by Ken Pierce Books with five stories featuring the femme fatale.
Synopsis Airboy was David ("Davy") Nelson II, the son of an expert pilot and, despite his youth, a crack flyer himself; he was also an expert mechanic and a skilled hand-to-hand combatant. His friend, inventor and
Franciscan friar Brother Francis Martier, had created a highly maneuverable prototype aircraft that flew by
flapping its wings, like a bird; it also had claws for grabbing opponents, twin
machine guns and could be summoned by radio. However, Martier was killed while testing it, and Davy inherited both the plane and a uniform, which had apparently been in the friar's family since the
French Revolution. Davy soon christened himself "Airboy", and in his seemingly sentient new plane, "Birdie", helped the
Allies during World War II. Airboy confronted such weird
antagonists as the mysterious Misery – whose mould-encrusted Airtomb imprisoned the souls of dead pilots – and his
bad girl nemesis, Valkyrie, a
whip-wielding German aviator clad in a green tunic split to her navel,
jodhpurs and riding boots. She led the crack all-female flying squad the Airmaidens before defecting and becoming an ally after witnessing the cruelty of superior Herr Oberst towards her charges. Other opponents included the hideously deformed Nazi fanatic the Black Ace and immortal CroMagnon occultist Zzed.
Timothy Truman was approached to write and draw the new series on the basis of his success with
Scout for Eclipse; a fan of the originals, he readily agreed. It would alternate with another bi-weekly 16-page title,
The New Wave, as part of Eclipse's plan to build a connected fictional universe; the Heap was planned to be the common denominator for the two titles.
Dave Stevens (who got to draw the cover for the third issue, which announced Valkyrie's return to consciousness) before he handed over to
Tom Lyle (pencils) and
Romeo Tanghal (inks) from #12 onwards. However, Woch felt the schedule was causing a drop in the quality of his work and left;
Bo Hampton drew two issues before
Ron Randall took over as regular artist.
Airboy #25 spotlighted concerns about California's environment, leading to mainstream news coverage of the issue on
CNN, Valkyrie remained a popular attraction for both readers and creators, and in May 1987 the character received a three-issue spin-off
limited series, with art by Gulacy. Capitalising on her sex appeal, each issue featured pinups from popular artists including
Brian Bolland,
Steve Leialoha,
Brent Anderson and
Bruce Jones, as well as a new piece by original Hillman artist Fred Kida.; the series was soon collected in a trade paperback,
Valkyrie – Prisoner of the Past, with a new painted cover from Gulacy, and was followed by the one-shot sequel the
Air Maidens Special, featuring art from Elmore. were consuming his time, and from #33
Airboy switched to a monthly schedule. This change did however mean that Woch agreed to return as artist, while
Dan Spiegle took over art duties for the
Skywolf back-up feature from
Airboy #34. However, the original negatives for the material were lost, and as a result Eclipse had to strike new masters from vintage issues. The characters also appeared in a crossover with Dixon's
Strike!, the
D-Day-set
The Airfighters Meet Sgt. Strike Special. A further spin-off, a limited series focusing on the Heap and written by
Swamp Thing co-creator
Len Wein, was mooted featuring art from
Carmine Infantino. Skywolf would graduate to his own
Vietnam War-set three issue mini-series in 1988, written by the prolific Dixon and drawn by Lyle, while Valkyrie would also receive a second mini after the previous year's success, with Anderson joining as artist. Further spin-offs were the one-shots
Target: Airboy.,
Airmaidens vs. Airboy. (which Yronwode would describe as "the closest Eclipse comes to an annual
Swimsuit special") and a crossover with Truman's
Prowler characters in
Airboy Meets The Prowler. By this stage Airboy was firmly established as one of Eclipse's most popular characters, and the Air Fighters would occupy major roles in Eclipse's tenth-anniversary mini-series
Total Eclipse, However, the output for the character would soon rapidly dwindle. While
Air Fighters Classics continued to sell well but would stall for several months while Eclipse searched for a copy of
Air Fighters Comics (Vol. 1) #6. A planned
Airboy Graphic Album intended to bridge the gap between the Hillman and Eclipse material was instead reworked as the contents of
Airboy #46–49, a storyline named "The Diary of Airboy" and featuring
Ernie Colón as artist afer Woch again left The title began to suffer delays; the double-sized
Airboy #50 featured
Andy Kubert on pencils,
Adam Kubert on inks and a
Joe Kubert cover, and appeared four months after #49. Inside it included a text piece from Yronwode taking up the letters page informing readers it would be the last issue "for the foreseeable future", listing difficulties in finding a suitable artist to replace Woch full-time as Colón had proved too slow, falling sales and alleged controversy over the book's political controversy. With
Airboy "on hiatus" related titles were also halted, with
Air Fighters Classics and a mooted
Skywolf one-shot with art from Alberto Maldonato. While Eclipse would issue the trade paperback
The Return of Valkyrie, reprinting
Airboy #1–5 with a cover from
Jim Steranko, Dixon moved onto other projects including
Merchants of Death and the company's adaptation of
J. R. R. Tolkien's
The Hobbit as the publisher moved away from ongoing comics. No new material featuring Airboy or his supporting characters appeared before Eclipse went out of business in 1995.
Plot After the conclusion of World War II, David Nelson II continued to work as a freelance pilot and mercenary for a time, but he eventually retired from combat flying and stored Birdie in a barn outside his California estate. He had a son, whom he named David Nelson III, and founded an aircraft manufacturing company, through which he became very wealthy. In the mid-1980s, David Nelson II was assassinated by mercenaries from the South American nation of Bogantilla. When David Nelson III discovered that his father had been assassinated, he began to investigate the circumstances which had led up to his father's death. He soon discovered his father's mothballed plane and uniform and teamed up with a number of the surviving Air Fighters to face many of the same enemies as David Nelson II, as well as South American dictators, Soviets, pirates and corporate criminals.
Reception Reception to the revival was largely positive. In 1987,
Amazing Heroes reviewer R.A. Jones listed it as one of the 10 best titles of the previous year, calling it "a captivating action-adventure strip". Don Thompson meanwhile lauded the fast pacing, while Roger Zelazny was also positive. Martin A. Stever reviewed the title in
Space Gamer/Fantasy Gamer No. 83. Stever commented that "the key to this book's success has been the balance Dixon has stuck between adventure, humor, mystery, and romance. This, along with break-neck pacing and plenty of action in every issue have made
Airboy a monthly even I look forward to". However, in the same magazine Gary D. Robinson was more reserved about
Airboy #50, questioning the need to make the hero so flawed.
Other publishers McFarlane Productions Eclipse's intellectual property rights were later acquired by
Todd McFarlane for a total of $25,000. The purchase was widely rumoured to be entirely motivated by the then-common belief it included the rights to another Eclipse title,
Miracleman At the time it was also widely believed it included the rights to
Airboy too, and in 1998 McFarlane produced a one-shot called
Total Eclipse featuring radically redesigned versions of the characters in
his art style. Only the Heap would go on to any further appearances in McFarlane's work, making occasional guest appearances in
Spawn.
Moonstone Books However, it was later learned that the
trademark for Airboy had expired when Eclipse folded, and that despite Mullaney and Yronwode indicating otherwise in interviews to prevent rivals from using the character, the remainder of the
Air Fighters canon remained in the public domain. followed by two issues of
anthology Airfighters in 2010, with a variety of creators including Dixon and
Tom DeFalco, and the one-shots
Airboy Presents: Air Vixens and
Airboy/G8, a crossover with fellow vintage comics aviator
G-8 The Moonstone material, which featured black-and-white interior art, was later collected in the trade paperback
Airboy and the Airfighters – Dangerous Liaisons, which also included the previously unprinted 30-page story "Insurrection", originally planned as one-shot ''Airfighters: L'Hospital St. Blaise''.
Antarctic Press The character next resurfaced at
Antarctic Press in 2012, again featuring the Golden Age version of the character. The five-issue mini-series
Airboy: Deadeye was co-written by Dixon with Gianluca Piredda, with art from Antarctic founder
Ben Dunn.
Image Comics Image Comics began publishing a new Airboy comic in 2014, written by
James Robinson and illustrated by Greg Hinkle. The
metafictional four-issue series begins with fictionalised versions of Robinson and Hinkle engaging in an orgy of drink, drugs and sex while trying to find the inspiration to write a new
Airboy series, only for the "real" Airboy to enter their world, much to the clean-cut character's horror. The series was attacked by
GLAAD and others for its
transphobia.
IDW Publishing While the Hillman intellectual property is in the public domain under the conditions of his Eclipse contract Dixon and the other creators on the 1980s version of the title retained copyright to their work, and as such Dixon and Truman were able to coordinate a series of reprints for
IDW Publishing.
Airboy Archives ran through five volumes, reprinting all of the Eclipse material bar the main story of
Total Eclipse (which featured numerous characters whose copyright was held by others – most notably Miracleman, who had recently been acquired by
Marvel Comics and the special
Target: Airboy (which had featured Clint from Don Chin's
Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters). Dixon edited the collection, and arranged the various mini-series and specials in their intended reading order.
It's Alive Dixon then collaborated with Drew Ford of
It's Alive Press to raised funds via
crowdfunding website
Indiegogo to continue the story from where
Airboy #50 left off. After reaching its first goal
Airboy #51, introducing appeared in October 2019, featuring art by Brent McKee and variant covers by Paul Gulacy, Jim Steranko,
Graham Nolan,
Don Perlin,
Matt Kindt,
Andrew MacLean,
Dalibor Talajić and Emma Kubert.
Airboy #52 was published in August 2022, drawn by Stipe Kalajzic. Ford's sudden death in October 2022 led to the shutdown of It's Alive Press. ==Collected editions==